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View Full Version : Navy Sets World Record With Incredible, Sci-Fi Weapon



Ares
10th December 2010, 01:19 PM
<img src="http://a57.foxnews.com/static/managed/img/Scitech/604/341/080201-navy-railgun-02.jpg"/>

A theoretical dream for decades, the railgun is unlike any other weapon used in warfare. And it's quite real too, as the U.S. Navy has proven in a record-setting test today in Dahlgren, VA.

Rather than relying on a explosion to fire a projectile, the technology uses an electomagnetic current to accelerate a non-explosive bullet at several times the speed of sound. The conductive projectile zips along a set of electrically charged parallel rails and out of the barrel at speeds up to Mach 7.

The result: a weapon that can hit a target 100 miles or more away within minutes.

"It's an over-used term, but it really changes several games," Rear Admiral Nevin P. Carr, Jr., the chief of Naval Research, told FoxNews.com prior to the test.

For a generation raised on shoot-'em-up video games, the word "railgun" invokes sci-fi images of an impossibly destructive weapon annihilating monsters and aliens. But the railgun is nonetheless very real.

An electromagnetic railgun offers a velocity previously unattainable in a conventional weapon, speeds that are incredibly powerful on their own. In fact, since the projectile doesn't have any explosives itself, it relies upon that kinetic energy to do damage. And at 11 a.m. today, the Navy produced a 33-megajoule firing -- more than three times the previous record set by the Navy in 2008.

"It bursts radially, but it's hard to quantify," said Roger Ellis, electromagnetic railgun program manager with the Office of Naval Research. To convey a sense of just how much damage, Ellis told FoxNews.com that the big guns on the deck of a warship are measured by their muzzle energy in megajoules. A single megajoule is roughly equivalent to a 1-ton car traveling at 100 mph. Multiple that by 33 and you get a picture of what would happen when such a weapon hits a target.

Ellis says the Navy has invested about $211 million in the program since 2005, since the railgun provides many significant advantages over convention weapons. For one thing, a railgun offers 2 to 3 times the velocity of a conventional big gun, so that it can hit its target within 6 minutes. By contrast, a guided cruise missile travels at subsonic speeds, meaning that the intended target could be gone by the time it reaches its destination.

Furthermore, current U.S. Navy guns can only reach targets about 13 miles away. The railgun being tested today could reach an enemy 100 miles away. And with current GPS guidance systems it could do so with pinpoint accuracy. The Navy hopes to eventually extend the range beyond 200 miles.

"We're also eliminating explosives from the ship, which brings significant safety benefits and logistical benefits," Ellis said. In other words, there is less danger of an unintended explosion onboard, particularly should such a vessel come under attack.

Indeed, a railgun could be used to inflict just such harm on another vessel.

Admiral Carr, who calls the railgun a "disruptive technology," said that not only would a railgun-equipped ship have to carry few if any large explosive warheads, but it could use its enemies own warheads against them. He envisions being able to aim a railgun directly at a magazine on an enemy ship and "let his explosives be your explosives."

There's also a cost and logistical benefit associated with railguns. For example, a single Tomahawk cruise missile costs roughly $600,000. A non-explosive guided railgun projectile could cost much less. And a ship could carry many more, reducing the logistical problems of delivering more weapons to a ship in battle. For these reasons, Admiral Carr sees the railgun as even changing the strategic and tactical assumptions of warfare in the future.

The Navy still has a distance to go, however, before the railgun test becomes a working onboard weapon. Technically, Ellis says they've already overcome several hurdles. The guns themselves generate a terrific amount of heat -- enough to melt the rails inside the barrel -- and power -- enough to force the rails apart, destroying the gun and the barrel in the process.

The projectile is no cannon ball, either. At speeds well above the sound barrier, aerodynamics and special materials must be considered so that it isn't destroyed coming out of the barrel or by heat as it travels at such terrific speeds.

Then there's question of electrical requirements. Up until recently, those requirements simply weren't practical. However, the naval researchers believe they can solve that issue using newer Navy ships and capacitors to build up the charge necessary to blast a railgun projectile out at supersonic speeds. Ellis says they hope to be able to shoot 6 to 12 rounds per minute, "but we're not there yet."

So when will the railgun become a working weapon? Both Ellis and Carr expect fully functional railguns on the decks of U.S. Navy ships in the 2025 time frame.

http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2010/12/10/navy-railgun-shoots-bullets-electromagnet/#ixzz17jp3VlkZ

Serpo
10th December 2010, 01:23 PM
When are they going to invent the love gun?

Ares
10th December 2010, 01:28 PM
When are they going to invent the love gun?


Kiss beat em too it ;D

<img src="http://sleevage.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/08/lovegun.jpg"/>

Ponce
10th December 2010, 02:20 PM
Rail gun is ok but I like this one better......the "bullet" is three feet long and inside the canon an detonation happens every five feet, is the cannon is X ammout long with X ammount of detonations every five feet then by the time the "bullet" comes out it will have a hell of a speed.....you can place something right behind the "bullet" so that it wont be damage, or detonated, by the continous explosions, think of a Y every five feet with the two leggs creating the explosions and the legg being the barrel.

Plastic
10th December 2010, 02:29 PM
Rail gun is ok but I like this one better......the "bullet" is three feet long and inside the canon an detonation happens every five feet, is the cannon is X ammout long with X ammount of detonations every five feet then by the time the "bullet" comes out it will have a hell of a speed.....you can place something right behind the "bullet" so that it wont be damage, or detonated, by the continous explosions, think of a Y every five feet with the two leggs creating the explosions and the legg being the barrel.



Is'nt that what Saddam built/tried to build to hit Israel?

If heat is a main concern with the rails I would expect them to be made of palladium as it's melt temp is something like 3,500 deg.

Ponce
10th December 2010, 02:34 PM
Plastic? something like that was being build for Sadam by an American, he was murdered before he was able to finish it........it something like 200 feet long and leaning against a hill pointing towards the state of Israel.

Plastic
10th December 2010, 02:38 PM
Yah I thought I saw it on the history channel several years back, the edomites were sh*****g themselves over it.

Ponce
10th December 2010, 02:42 PM
The Germans had a really big one called "Big Bertha" that was mounted on two railroads cars that were moving around all the time......it was able to reach the UK.

Plastic
10th December 2010, 02:59 PM
That one was used only for Paris if I remember my history correctly. But you are right, it should have been used exclusively on London and anyplace else the Rothschild family infests.

Ponce
10th December 2010, 03:38 PM
Paris? hummmmmmmm I'd better go back to the drawing board......thanks.

ShortJohnSilver
10th December 2010, 04:17 PM
Is'nt that what Saddam built/tried to build to hit Israel?

If heat is a main concern with the rails I would expect them to be made of palladium as it's melt temp is something like 3,500 deg.


You are thinking of Gerald Bull, who died under mysterious circumstances: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerald_Bull

They could use ruthenium, far cheaper at $100/ounce and melts at 4000+ , or tungsten, far cheaper than that which melts at 8000+ .

palani
10th December 2010, 04:26 PM
So that was what that contrail off LA was a month ago.

madfranks
10th December 2010, 06:14 PM
The conductive projectile zips along a set of electrically charged parallel rails and out of the barrel at speeds up to Mach 7.


Mach 7 is roughly 5,000 mph, just fyi.

Horn
10th December 2010, 06:42 PM
Ellis says they hope to be able to shoot 6 to 12 rounds per minute, "but we're not there yet."

Now if only they made it with some sort of buck shot we'd be talking some damage.

skid
10th December 2010, 07:00 PM
You are thinking of Gerald Bull, who died under mysterious circumstances: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gerald_Bull


Gerald Bull is quite an interesting individual. Good article in Wikipedia..

His artillery fired at almost 7000 mph, faster than the railgun mentioned above...

Horn
10th December 2010, 10:24 PM
I see they already had my shotgun idea in there

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4OqlTXwLG40